Inside Students combat drinking and driving V 01.96, No. 72 20 Pages ©1995 Collegian Inc. PSU increases basketball ticket prices In addition to price changes, the ticket distribution process is more similar to football’s. By HOPE CALDWELL Collegian Sports Writer Basketball at Penn State will never be the same after this season. Along with the new Bryce Jordan Center comes increased ticket prices and an application process similar to the distribution of football tick ets. Legislative salary hike gets local response By JIM KINNEY and MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN Collegian Staff Writers The last time Pennsylvania legis lators voted in favor of a pay raise President Reagan called the White House home and Penn State’s foot ball team celebrated its second National Championship. The lapse between this pay increase and the last one, which took effect beginning in 1988, is the primary reason some believe the salary hike is appropriate. “Unless they were tremendously overpaid back then, this is long overdue,” said Robert O’Connor, associate professor of political sci ence. The pay hike, which will not affect legislators’ salaries during this term, will raise lawmakers’ annual pay by 18 percent from $47,000 to $55,800. The bill also includes a provision to boost the salaries of judges, the governor, attorney general, auditor general, treasurer and executive branch officials. Gov. Tom Ridge is expected to sign the bill soon. Lawmakers also showed support for a cost-of-living increase that would be added at only the begin ning of each legislator’s or offi cial’s new term. John Stewart, political science lecturer at Mont Alto Campus, said he has no qualms with a legislative pay hike but is concerned about the impact of an automatic cost-of-liv ing increase. “It takes the heat off of them in the future and aggravates the bud get without any legislative initia tive,” Stewart said. Stewart also said legislators probably passed the pay-raise mea sure Tuesday to avoid making it an election issue next year. Please see SALARY, Page 10. D.C. march urges action by students By MARY CATHERINE OPFERMAN and JULIE M. RANDALL Collegian Staff Writers In the aftermath of the Million Man March, black students and faculty gathered yesterday at Zeta Phi Beta sorority, 13 Shulze Hall, and discussed carrying the mes sage of the march into the local community. About 20 people assembled in the suite to hear the firsthand accounts of men who attended the march in Washington, D.C., Monday. Chinedu Osondu Eke (graduate student-mass communications) emphasized the importance of liv ing out the message. “How do we localize it as individ uals in this room? We should reach out to other black men. . . . We have to be brothers. We have to respect ourselves and each other. Our goal is to take the message and ■ 1 ■_ m ■■ II Back by popular demand, the LcIUV DOOterS roll fine pumpkin-hunting weather , , H W returns. Today, sunny and mild, / Lady Lions handle Duquense with ease, capturing a 5 < IJHMJ 7-0 victory at Jeffrey Field Page 11 by Paul Markowski A Collegian ’ Page 2 The ticket office is offering only one “A few dollars here and there isn’t going Meredith said. Students will still be able to new Center has more seats so it probably package this year, consisting of 10 games to make much of a difference because if purchase individual game tickets. won’t sell out, she said, for $5O a one dollar increase per game you want to see them play, you pay,” Can- Becky Slick (sophomore-exercise and The ticket office began accepting app - with two fewer games offered than last. giano said. sports science) bought both packages last cations and checks yesterday morning at Athletic Director Tim Curley said with Bud Meredith, athletic ticket manager, year. the Beaver Stadiumticket office. By 330 the price increase, Penn State tickets still said the packages are different this year “I was planning on buying the package p.m. 1,000 applications were submitted remain one of the cheapest in the Big Ten. because of the transition from Rec Hall to until I saw the team’s schedule,” Slick said. The deadline is Nov. 1, but tickets are not Penn State made the increase after exam- the Bryce Jordan Center. The uncertainty “It’ll be cheaper to buy the individual guaranteed through that date the first ining the budget projections for the past of any possible construction delays is games that I want to see.” 2 800 orders will receive all 10 games in veTr he said another reason for the alteration. She said she likes the application the package. Students can then pick up Mark Cangiano (sophomore-professional Three games in the package will be process that the ticket office is using this their tickets Nov. 6. golf management) did not buy tickets last played at Rec Hall and seven at the Center, year because it makes things easier for I assume " g° back to the first year, but said true fans will still go to the “Once we’re back into one facility we students. « ° b * V ’ games. will go back to splitting the package,” Plus, Rec Hall never sold out and the Meredith said. Pint-sized Picasso Christopher Thompson, 9, of State College proudly displays his artwork yesterday. He was attending a class on ceramics and painting in The Center for Arts and Crafts at the HUB. act upon it,” he said. “We should clean the neighborhoods, register for Big Brothers, and be role mod els.” Nadine Farrell, Zeta Phi Beta treasurer, stressed the need for black involvement in the communi ty- “We need to set an agenda for (the University) in our communi ty,” Farrell said. Although the march was predom inantly male, the men and women discussing the march did not see that as a division. Instead, they saw it as an effort to positively affect the black community. “I believe in the cause of the black man, the cause of the black woman and the cause of the black race,” said Eke, who attended the march. Please see MARCH, Page 10. Thursday, Oct. 19,1995 Local businesses, national chains compete for employees By PHILLIP D. WIEST Collegian Staff Writer Cash is the most elementary source of competition in the busi ness world. But, the battle in State College between small local busi nesses and recently opened nation al chains has illuminated another point of conflict employment. Recruiting employees is always an important element of competi tion, and the business climate in State College is no different. Edward Coulson, assistant pro fessor of economics, said the emer gence of big corporations in any town will create jobs. “This is a highly transient area,” he said. “In service-sector jobs, a lot of the jobs are part time so there are temporary increases in demand.” And when demand is high, many students feel national chains have the edge in drawing employees. “Students are inclined to apply at national chains,” said Frank Sanders (senior-civil engineering). “I think it would be the first thing they would think of when they begin to look.” For Trudy Sandy (senior-psy chology), getting a job at a large business was essential. “I prefer big places at the smaller ones you don’t meet enough people,” said Sandy, an employee at Sam’s Club, 381 Ben ner Pike. “(At Sam’s Club) there are more benefits and advantages, and the higher wages also caught my eye.” Many smaller employers agree wages at national chains are high er. But, according to some local small business owners, wages are not the only major factor that stu dents consider. Nina Klein, manager of Vibes, 226 E. College Ave., said students look for a manager they can work with. “I don’t know if it goes along Please see BUSINESS, Page 10. Published independently by students at Penn State Carrico's trial set to begin Trial to be held in Beliefonte Robert Carrico, 22, is charged with first- and third-degree murder after allegedly stabbing Theodore F. Enos. By THOMAS A. MURSE Collegian Staff Writer The trial of a State College man charged with the Jan. 8 stabbing death of another local man will begin Monday at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte. Robert Carrico, 22, formerly of 324 Vairo Blvd., was charged with first-degree and third-degree mur der after he allegedly stabbed Theodore F. Enos with a hunting knife in front of a room full of wit nesses, the State College Police Department said. The alleged incident occurred while the men were in a rooming house at 228 S. Atherton St., police said. Carrico allegedly stabbed Enos twice in the chest, once in the abdomen and slashed his head, State College police said. Enos then was transported to Centre Commu nity Hospital where he underwent surgery and later died from a lac erated liver and wounds to the tho racic and abdominal areas. Centre County District Attorney Ray Gricar, who is prosecuting Carrico, would not comment on a possible motive for the incident. Carrico also is charged with aggravated assault, reckless endangerment and simple assault stemming from an incident that took place after the murder. Police allege that a scuffle ensued when Jeff McDowell, then 19, of State College, attempted to restrain Carrico after he allegedly stabbed Enos. After the incident, police said, Carrico fled to Colorado with Kathryn Prisk, then 17. The Burlington County Police Department and the Kit Carson County Sheriff’s Department cap tured and arrested Carrico without resistance on Jan. 10 in Burlington, Colo., State College police said. State College police tracked him to the Burlington area by tracing several telephone calls he made from there to the State College area. Carrico and Prisk were found at a motel, on Interstate 70 in Col orado, where they were staying, State College police said. Carrico was extradited to State College on Jan. 28 and arraigned on murder charges before District Justice Daniel Hoffman. At a preliminary hearing in Feb ruary, District Justice Robert Shoff ordered Carrico to stand trial. Carrico is being held in Cen tre County Prison. A spokesperson for the Centre County Public Defender’s Office said Chief Public Defender David Crowley, who is defending Carrico, will not comment on the trial until it is completed. Prisk returned to State College Jan. 10, the same day she and Car rico were captured, State College police said. No charges were filed against her. Carrico has been arrested in State College before, according to State College police reports. He also was arrested several days earlier by State College police for an alleged simple assault out side Campus Casino, 320 E. College Ave. After his arrest, he allegedly hit Lt. John Owens at the Centre Coun ty Prison. Carrico was imprisoned and later released on $l,OOO bail. Collegian Graphic/Ryan O'Rourke